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Browsing named entities in a specific section of E. T. Merrill, Commentary on Catullus (ed. E. T. Merrill). Search the whole document.

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Ulysses (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): text comm, poem 58b
order to attack Medusa in safety, Perseus had borrowed of the Nymphs the winged shoes like those of Hermes as well as Pluto's helmet of invisibility and the magic wallet; see Apollod. 2.4.2. Cf. Prop. 3.30.3 non si Pegaseo vecteris in aere dorso, nec tibi si Persei moverit ala pedes. pinnipes is a(/pac lego/menon. Rhesi: Rhesus was the king of Thrace whose famous horses Ulysses and Diomed stole on the night of his arrival to help the Trojans; cf. Hom. Il. 10.438ff.; Ov. Met. 13.249ff. There is a similar anacoluthon to that in v. 3; si ferar fills out the idea. plumipedes: a(/pac lego/menon; the reference is clearly not to flying men like Daedalus and the sons of Boreas (for Perseus in v. 3 is a type of such swiftness), but to birds, thus interposed between horses and winds.
pinnipes Perseus: in order to attack Medusa in safety, Perseus had borrowed of the Nymphs the winged shoes like those of Hermes as well as Pluto's helmet of invisibility and the magic wallet; see Apollod. 2.4.2. Cf. Prop. 3.30.3 non si Pegaseo vecteris in aere dorso, nec tibi si Persei moverit ala pedes. pinnipes is a(/pac lego/menon. Rhesi: Rhesus was the king of Thrace whose famous horses Ulysses and Diomed stole on the night of his arrival to help the Trojans; cf. Hom. Il. 10.438ff.; Ov. Met. 13.249ff. There is a similar anacoluthon to that in v. 3; si ferar fills out the idea. plumipedes: a(/pac lego/menon; the reference is clearly not to flying men like Daedalus and the sons of Boreas (for Perseus in v. 3 is a type of such swiftness), but to birds, thus interposed between hor